TLDR
- Q2 2025 EPS of $4.62 missed analyst estimates of $4.90
- Adjusted EPS stood at $4.72, down from $5.99 last year
- Revenue declined 0.7% year-over-year to $16.57 billion
- Operating profit margin fell to 17.3%, from 20.9%
- Deployed $1.5 billion for share buybacks and dividends
Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) shares rose 0.37% to $435.29 by midday Tuesday, following the release of its second-quarter 2025 results.
The company reported earnings that missed Wall Street estimates, though strong cash flow and demand resilience provided some support for investor sentiment. The earnings date was August 5, 2025.
Q2 Earnings Decline, Miss Expectations
Caterpillar posted second-quarter profit per share of $4.62, down from $5.48 in Q2 2024. Adjusted profit per share, which excludes restructuring costs, came in at $4.72, short of the $4.90 analysts had projected. Net earnings totaled $2.179 billion compared to $2.681 billion last year.
Revenue for the period stood at $16.569 billion, a slight drop from $16.689 billion in the year-ago quarter. The 1% decrease in revenue was largely driven by unfavorable price realization of $414 million. This was partially offset by a $237 million boost in sales volume, primarily from increased equipment sales to end users.
Caterpillar Inc., $CAT, Q2-25. Results:
📊 Adj. EPS: $4.72 🔴
💰 Revenue: $16.6B 🟢
📈 Net Income: $2.18B
🔎 Profit declined YoY due to higher tariffs and weaker pricing, but strong cash flow and demand resilience supported operations. pic.twitter.com/Q97C0eZMZY— EarningsTime (@Earnings_Time) August 5, 2025
Margins Shrink Despite Strong Demand
Caterpillar’s operating profit margin fell to 17.3% in Q2 2025 from 20.9% a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, the margin was 17.6%, down from 22.4% in the prior year. Despite the margin pressure, CEO Joe Creed emphasized the company’s operational performance and noted continued strong order volumes, supported by infrastructure projects and rising energy needs.
Cash Flow and Shareholder Returns Stay Strong
Enterprise operating cash flow came in at $3.1 billion for the quarter, underscoring Caterpillar’s solid financial position. The company ended the quarter with $5.4 billion in enterprise cash. It returned a total of $1.5 billion to shareholders during Q2, deploying $0.8 billion for stock repurchases and $0.7 billion for dividends.
Long-Term Returns Outperform S&P 500
Despite this quarter’s earnings miss, Caterpillar’s long-term stock performance has been strong. The stock has delivered a year-to-date return of 21.46%, outperforming the S&P 500’s 7.27%. Over the past five years, CAT has returned 255.82% compared to 89.59% for the broader index.
Caterpillar’s Q2 performance reflects a mixed picture—pressure on margins and revenue but healthy cash generation and strong market demand. Investors may look past the earnings miss in favor of the company’s ability to generate consistent returns and navigate near-term headwinds.